Sagot :
Answer:
right now, it’s still very difficult to answer that question. What we can say is that the epidemiological phenomena such as SARS, MERS, H5N1, H1N1, and Ebola that we’ve seen in recent years are related to the way humans occupy space and use wild animals.
Several factors have heightened the risks of contagion: increased human contact with natural environments that are potential sources of pathogens, trade in wild animals, the concentration of wild and domestic animals in captivity, and intensive peri-urban or suburban livestock farming under deplorable sanitary conditions. In southwest China, epidemiologists have reported conditions that are highly conducive to the development of viral strains. Massive development of consumption and transport leads to very rapid intensification of these phenomena.
Explanation: